by Ian Rankin
The letter was in McPhail’s pocket. ‘Cafferty?’ he asked, forcing the word from his lungs.
The smiling man blinked lazily in acknowledgement. In McPhail’s other pocket was the broken neck of a whisky bottle he’d found beside an overflowing bottle bank. It wasn’t much of a weapon, but it was all he could afford. Even so, he didn’t rate his chances. His bladder felt painfully full. He reached for the letter.
The driver pinned his arms to his side and swung him around, so he was face to face with Cafferty, who swung a kick into his groin. The butt of a three-section snooker cue slipped expertly from Cafferty’s coat sleeve into his hand. As McPhail doubled over, the cue caught him on the side of the jaw, fracturing it, dislodging teeth. He fell further forwards and was rewarded with the cue on the back of his neck. His whole body went numb. Now the driver was pulling his head up by the hair and Cafferty was forcing his mouth open with the cue, working it past his tongue and into his throat.
‘Hold it there!’ Two of them, a man and a woman, running from across the street and holding open their IDs. ‘Police officers.’
Cafferty lifted both hands away, raising them head high. He had left the cue in McPhail’s mouth. The driver released the battered man, who remained upright on his knees. Shakily, Andrew McPhail started to pull the snooker cue out of his throat. There were sirens close by as a police car approached.
‘It’s nothing, officer,’ Cafferty was saying, ‘a misunderstanding.’
‘Some misunderstanding,’ said the male police officer. His sidekick slipped her hand into McPhail’s pocket. She felt a broken bottle. Wrong pocket. From the other pocket she produced the letter, crumpled now. She handed it to Cafferty.
‘Open this, please, sir,’ she said.
Cafferty stared at it. ‘Is this a set-up?’ But he opened it anyway. Inside was a scrap of paper, which he unfolded. The note was unsigned. He knew who it was from anyway. ‘Rebus!’ he spat. ‘That bastard Rebus!’
A few minutes later, as Cafferty and his driver were being taken away, and the ambulance was arriving for Andrew McPhail, Siobhan picked up the note which Cafferty had dropped. It said simply, ‘I hope they sell your skin for souvenirs.’ She frowned and looked up at the surveillance window, but couldn’t see anyone there.
Had she seen anything, it would have been the outline of a man making the shape of a gun from his fist, lining up the thumb so Cafferty was in its sights, and pulling the imaginary trigger.
Bang!
35
Nobody at St Leonard’s believed Holmes and Siobhan were there that night simply out of an exaggerated sense of duty. The more credible version had them meeting for a clandestine shag and just happening upon the beating. Lucky there was film in the surveillance camera. And didn’t the photos come out well?
With Cafferty in custody, they got the chance to take away his things and have yet another look at the…including the infamous coded diary. Watson and Lauderdale were poring over xeroxed sheets from it when there was a knock at the Chief Super’s door.
‘Come!’ called Watson, John Rebus walked in and looked around admiringly at the sudden floorspace. ‘I see you got your cabinets, sir.’
Lauderdale pulled himself up straight. ‘What the hell are you doing here? You’re suspended from duty.’
‘It’s all right, Frank,’ said Watson, ‘I asked Inspector Rebus to come in.’ He turned the xeroxed pages towards Rebus. ‘Take a look.’
It didn’t take long. The problem with the code in the past was that they hadn’t known what to look for. But now Rebus had a more than fair idea. He stabbed one entry. ‘There,’ he said. ‘3TUB SCS.’
‘Yes?’
‘It means the butcher on South Clerk Street owes three thousand. He’s abbreviated ‘butcher’ and written it backwards.’
Lauderdale looked disbelieving. ‘Are you sure?’
Rebus shrugged. ‘Put the experts at Fettes onto it. They should be able to find at least a few more late-payers.’
‘Thank you, John,’ said Watson. Rebus turned smartly and left the room. Lauderdale stared at his superior.
‘I get the feeling,’ he said, ‘something’s going on here I don’t know about.’
‘Well, Frank,’ said Watson, ‘why should today be different from any other?’
Which, as the saying went, put CI Lauderdale’s gas at a very low peep.
It was Siobhan Clarke who came up with the most important piece of information in the whole case.
It was a case now. Rebus didn’t mind that the machine was in operation without him. Holmes and Clarke reported back to him at the end of each day. The code-breakers had been hard at work, as a result of which detectives were talking to Cafferty’s black book victims. It would only take one or two of them in court, and Cafferty would be going down. So far, though, no one was talking. Rebus had an idea of one person who, given enough persuasion, might.
Then Siobhan mentioned that Cafferty’s company Geronimo Holdings held a seventy-nine per cent share in a large farm in the south-west Borders, not so very far from the coastline where the bodies had been washing up until recently. A party was sent to the farm. They found plenty for the forensic scientists to start working o…especially the pigsties. The sties themselves were clean enough, but there was an enclosed area of storage space above each ramshackle sty. Most of the farm had turned itself over to the latest in high-tech agriculture; but not the sties. It was this which initially alerted the police. Above the pigsties, in the dark enclosures strewn with rank straw, there was a tangible reek of something unwholesome, something putrid. Strips of cloth were found; in one corner there lay a man’s trouser-belt. The area was photographed and picked over for its least congruous particles. Upstairs in the farmhouse, meanwhile, a man who claimed initially to be an agricultural labourer eventually admitted to being Derek Torrance, better known as Deek.
At the same time, Rebus was driving out to Dalkeith, to Duncton Terrace, to be precise. It was early evening, and the Kintoul family was at home. Mother, father and son took up three sides of a fold-down table in the kitchen. The chip-pan was still smouldering and spitting on the greasy gas cooker. The vinyl wallpaper was slick with condensation. Most of the food on the plates was disguised by brown sauce. Rebus could smell vinegar and washing-up liquid. Rory Kintoul excused himself and went with Rebus into the living room. Kitchen and living room were connected by a serving hatch. Rebus wondered if wife and son would be listening at the hatch.
Rebus sat in one fireside chair, Kintoul opposite him.
‘Sorry if it’s a bad time,’ Rebus began. There was a ritual to be followed, after all.
‘What is it, Inspector?’
‘You’ll have heard, Mr Kintoul, we’ve arrested Morris Cafferty. He’ll be going away for quite a while.’ Rebus looked at the photos on the mantelpiece, snapshots of gap-toothed kids, nephews and nieces. He smiled at them. ‘I just thought maybe it was time you got it off your chest.’
He kept silent for a moment, still examining the framed photos. Kintoul said nothing.
‘Only,’ said Rebus, ‘I know you’re a good man. I mean, a good man. You put family first, am I right?’ Kintoul nodded uncertainly. ‘Your wife and son, you’d do anything for them. Same goes for your other family, parents, sisters, brothers, cousin…’ Rebus trailed off.
‘I know Cafferty’s going away,’ said Kintoul.
‘And?’
Kintoul shrugged.
‘It’s like this,’ said Rebus. ‘We know just about all there is to know. We just need a little corroboration.’
‘That means testifying?’
Rebus nodded. Eddie Ringan would be testifying too, telling all he knew about the Central Hotel, in return for a good word from the police come his own trial. ‘Mr Kintoul, you’ve got to accept something. You’ve got to accept that you’ve changed, you’re not the same man you were a year or two ago. Why did you do it?’ Rebus asked the way a friend would, just curious.
Kintoul wiped a smear
of sauce from his chin. ‘It was a favour. Jim always needed favours.’
‘So you drove the van?’
‘Yes, I did his rounds.’
‘But you were a lab technician!’
Kintoul smiled. ‘And I could earn more on the butcher’s round.’ He shrugged again. ‘Like you say, Inspector, I put family first, especially where money’s concerned.’
‘Go on.’
‘How much do you know?’
‘We know the van was used to dump the bodies.’
‘Nobody ever notices a butcher’s van.’
‘Except a poor constable in north-east Fife. He ended up with concussion.’
‘That was after my time. I was shot of it by then.’ He waited till Rebus nodded agreement, then went on. ‘Only, when I wanted out Cafferty didn’t want me out. He was putting pressure on.’
‘That’s how you got stabbed?’
‘It was that bodyguard of his, Jimmy the Ear. He lost the head. Knifed me as I was getting out of the car. Crazy bastard.’ Kintoul glanced towards the serving-hatch. ‘You know what Cafferty did when I said I wanted to stop driving the van? He offered Jason a job “driving” for him. Jason’s my son.’
Rebus nodded. ‘But why all this fuss? Cafferty could get a hundred guys to drive a van for him.’
‘I thought you knew him, Inspector. Cafferty’s like that. He’s .. particular about his flesh.’
‘He’s off his head,’ commented Rebus. ‘How did you get sucked in in the first place?’
‘I was still driving full-time when Cafferty won half the business from Jimmy. One evening, one of Cafferty’s men turned up all smarmy, told me we’d be taking a run to the coast early next morning. Via some farm in the Borders.’
‘You went to the farm?’ So that’s why there was straw in the van. The colour was seeping from Kintoul’s face like blood from a cut of meat.
‘Oh aye. There was something in the pigsties, tied up in fertiliser bags. Stank to high heaven. I’d been working in a butcher’s long enough to know it had been rotting in that sty for a good few weeks, months, even.’
‘A corpse?’
‘Easy to tell, isn’t it? I threw my guts up. Cafferty’s man said what a waste, I should’ve done it into the trough.’ Kintoul paused. He was still wiping at his chin, though the sauce mark had long ago been erased. ‘Cafferty liked the bodies to be rotten, less chance of them washing ashore in any recognisable state.’
‘Christ.’
‘I haven’t come to the worst part yet.’ In the next room, Kintoul’s wife and son were speaking in undertones. Rebus was in no hurry, and merely watched as Kintoul got up to stare from his back window. There was a patch of garden out there he could call his own. It was small, but it was his. He came back and stood in front of the gas fire, not looking at Rebus.
‘I was there one day when he killed someone,’ he said baldly. Then he screwed shut his eyes. Rebus was trying to control his own breathing. This guy would make a gem of a witness.
‘Killed them how?’ Still not pressing; still the friend.
Kintoul tipped his head back, feeding tears back where they had come from. ‘How? With his bare hands. We’d arrived late. The van had broken down in the middle of nowhere. It was about ten in the morning. Mist all around the farm, like driving into Brigadoon. They were both wearing business suits, that’s what got me. And they were up to their ankles in glaur.’
Rebus frowned, not quite comprehending. ‘They were in the pigsty?’
Kintoul nodded. ‘There’s a fenced run. Cafferty was in there with this man. There were other people watching through the fence.’ He swallowed. ‘I swear Cafferty looked like he was enjoying it. There with the mud lapping at him, and the pigs squealing in their boxes wondering what the hell was happening, and all the silent onlookers.’ Kintoul tried to shake the memory away, probably a daily event.
‘They were fighting?’
‘The other man looked like he’d been roughed up beforehand. Nobody’d call it a fair fight. And eventually, after Cafferty’d beaten the living shite out of him, he grabbed him by the neck and forced him down into the muck. He stood on the man’s back, balancing there, and holding the face down with his hands. He looked like it was nothing new. Then the man stopped strugglin…’
Rebus and Kintoul were silent, blood pounding through them, both trying to cope with the vision of an early morning pigst…‘Afterwards,’ said Kintoul, his voice lower than ever, ‘he beamed at us like it was his coronation.’
Then, in complete grimacing silence, he started to weep.
Rebus was visiting the Infirmary so often he was considering taking out a season ticket. But he hadn’t expected to see Flower there.
‘Checking in? The psychiatric section’s down the hall.’
‘Ha ha,’ said Flower.
‘What are you doing here anyway?’
‘I could ask you the same question.’
‘I live here, what about you?’
‘I came to ask some questions.’
‘Of Andrew McPhail?’ Flower nodded. ‘Did nobody tell you his jaw’s wired shut?’ Flower twitched, producing a good wide grin from Rebus. ‘How come it’s your business anyway?’
‘It involves Cafferty,’ Flower said.
‘Oh aye, so it does, I’d forgotten.’
‘Looks like we’ve got him this time.’
‘Looks like it. But you never know with Cafferty.’ Rebus stared unblinking at Flower as he spoke. ‘The reason he’s lasted so long is he’s clever. He’s clever, and he’s got the best lawyers. Plus he’s got people scared of him, and he’s got people in his pocke…maybe even a copper or three.’
Flower had stared out the gaze; now he blinked. ‘You think I was in Cafferty’s pocket?’
Rebus had been pondering this. He had Cafferty marked down for the attack on Michael and the scam with the gun. As for the clumsy hit-and-run attempt, that was so amateurish, he guessed at Broderick Gibson for its architect. Quite simply, Cafferty would have used better men.
He’d been silent long enough, so he shook his head. ‘I don’t think you’re that smart. Cafferty likes smart people. But I do think you had a word with the Inland Revenue about me.’
‘I don’t know what, you’re talking about.’
Rebus grinned. ‘I do like a cliché.’ Then he walked on down the hall.
Andrew McPhail was easy to find. You just looked for the broken face. He was wired up like somebody’s first attempt at a junction box. Rebus thought he could see where they’d used two wires where one would have sufficed. But then he was no doctor. McPhail had his eyes closed.
‘Hello there,’ said Rebus. The eyes opened. There was anger there, but Rebus could cope with it. He held up a hand. ‘No,’ he said, ‘don’t bother to thank me.’ Then he smiled. ‘It’s all set up for when they let you out. Up north for rehabilitation, maybe a job, and bracing coastal walks. Man, I envy you.’ He looked around the ward. Every bed had a body in it. The nurses looked like they could use a holiday or at the very least a gin and lime with some dry-roast peanuts.
‘I said I’d leave you alone,’ Rebus went on, ‘and I keep my word. But a piece of advice.’ He rested his hands on the edge of the bed and leaned towards McPhail. ‘Cafferty’s the biggest villain in town. You’re probably the only bugger in Edinburgh who didn’t know that. Now his men know a guy called McPhail set their boss up. So don’t ever think of coming back, will you?’ McPhail still glared at him. ‘Good,’ said Rebus. He straightened up, turned, and walked away, then paused and turned. ‘Oh,’ he said, ‘and I meant to say something.’ He returned to the bed and stood at its foot, where charts showed McPhail’s temperature and medicaments. Rebus waited till McPhail’s wet eyes were on his, then he smiled sympathetically again.
‘Sorry,’ he said. This time, when he turned he kept on walking.
Andy Steele had been the necessary go-between. It was too dangerous for Rebus to put the story out first-hand. The source of the tale mi
ght have got back to Cafferty, and that would have ruined everything. McPhail hadn’t been necessary, but he’d been useful. Rebus explained the ruse twice to Andy Steele, and even then the young fisherman didn’t seem to take it all in. He had the look of a man with a dozen unaskable questions.
‘So what are you going to do now?’ Rebus asked. He’d been hoping in fact that Steele might already have left for home.
‘Oh, I’m applying for a grant,’ said Steele.
‘You mean like university?’
But Steele hooted. ‘Not likely! It’s one of those schemes to get the unemployed into business.’
‘Oh aye?’
Steele nodded. ‘I’m eligible.’
‘So what’s the business?’
‘A detective agency, of course!’
‘Where exactly?’
‘Edinburgh. I’ve made more money since I came here than I made in six months in Aberdeen.’
‘You cannot be serious,’ said Rebus. But Andy Steele was.
36
He had one last meeting planned, and wasn’t looking forward to it. He walked from St Leonard’s to the University library at George Square. The indifferent security man on the door glanced at his ID and nodded him towards the front desk, where Nell Stapleton, tall and broad-shouldered, was taking returned books from a duffel-coated student. She caught his eye and looked surprised. Pleased at first; but as she went through the books, Rebus saw her mind wasn’t wholly on the job. At last, she came over to him.
‘Hello, John.’
‘Nell.’
‘What brings you here?’
‘Can we have a word?’
She checked with the other assistant that it was okay to take a five-minute break. They walked as far as a book-lined corridor.
‘Brian tells me you’ve closed the case, the one he was so worried about.’
Rebus nodded.
‘That’s great news. Thanks for your help.’
Rebus shrugged.
She tilted her head slightly. ‘Is something the matter?’
‘I’m not sure,’ said Rebus. ‘Do you want to tell me?’
‘Me?’